If your talking about the majority of space which is just nothing then heat affects it through radiation. Since there is no matter to transfer heat heat cannot be transfered through conduction or convection. Like the closer you travel to the sun the hotter its going to get but not because of direct contact or matter.
The sun gives off radiation, which can travel through space, and is later converted into heat when it contacts matter (Earth, space crafts, astronauts, asteroids, ect.).
Yes, although it would require engineering to withstand the vacuum that would make lubricants evaporate, and extreme heat/cold that would affect insulation.
Earth loses heat energy to outer space mainly by radiation.
No
Clouds and the atmosphere.
Density (:
clean ice reflects sunlight back into space and prevents heat buidup on ice, dirty ice has the opposite affect
when heat occupieses space,the particles of heat are moving around in the space that they occupy
It doesn't necessarily affect space itself but it can affect the Earth's tilt or axis in space.
Heat is a form of energy. It can be transmitted through space but it does not occupy space.
Heat does not affect it. It expands with coolness. It contracts with heat.
A greenhouse effect traps heat that would otherwise escape out to space, so it keeps the planet warm.
Temperature or heat affects the speed or the distance between the particles because the hotter an object is the more space it will have so the more space between each particle the more faster it will get..... Hope u understand.......
Heat can affect the molecular composition of an object.
heat is transfered through space by radiation.
Heat doesn't occupy space.
Heat can travel through outer space as radiation. However, space is more or less a vacuum, so it's not a conductor of heat.